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California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 1 [p. 2] 1. are made of 2. can make [p. 3] 3. Janssen, Hooke, electron microscope, scanning tunneling microscope [p. 4] 4. c 5. a 6. b [p. 5] Possible answers may include, in any order: 7. chloroplasts 8. cell wall 9. larger vacuoles [p. 6] 10./11. Possible answers may include any two of the following: growth, response, reproduction, nutrition, respiration, excretion [p. 7] 12. carry out all life activities in one cell 13. They live and produce more of their own kind. 14. Cells carry out different jobs. [p. 8] Reading Diagrams: Animal organs may include brain, lungs, heart, stomach; plant organs may include stems, fruits [p. 9] 15. b 16. c 17. a [p. 10] 18. order 19. species [p. 11] 20. spider 21. frog 22. dog Page 1 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 1 (continued) [p. 13] 23. clams (the only invertebrate in the list) 24. sharks (the only vertebrate in the list) [p. 14] 25. produce their own food. 26. true roots, stems, or leaves (vascular tissue). [p. 15] 27. cannot make its own food [p. 16] 28. do not have a nucleus [p. 17] 29. can make their own food 30. eat other living things [p. 18] 1. vacuole 2. organism 3. cell membrane 4. chloroplast 5. organ system 6. nucleus 7. cell 8. mitochondrion 9. cytoplasm 10. tissue 11. organ 12. cell wall [p. 19] 1. fungus [reversed, 2nd row from the bottom, starting in the 2nd column from the right] 2. protest [reversed, 3rd row from the bottom, starting in the 1st column at the right] 3. vertebrate [5th column from the left, starting in the 4th row from the top] 4. kingdom [3rd row from the top, starting at the 1st column to the left] 5. invertebrate [4th row from the bottom, starting in the 1st column at the left] 6. bacteria [5th row from the bottom, starting in the 5th column from the left] 7. vascular [4th row from the top, starting in the 5th column from the left] 8. nonvascular [top row, starting in the 3rd column from the left] Page 2 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 2 [p. 23] 1. b 2. c 3. d 4. a [p. 25] 5. seedless/seed 6. angiosperms/gymnosperms [p. 26] 7. pollination (Pollen is moved from stems to pistil.) 8. making a seed (A seed is made inside the ovary.) 9. scattering seeds (Seeds are scattered by wind or animals.) [p. 29] 10. Xylem (vascular tissue or tubes) moves water up from roots to leaves. 11. One moves water/minerals upward; the other moves food downward. [p. 31] 12. Water cannot move up. 13. Phloem dies 14. There is plentiful rain. [p. 33] 15. root 16. sugar 17. energy [p. 35] 18. Photosynthesis produces sugars and oxygen from carbon dioxide and water. 19. Respiration uses the oxygen and sugars and produces carbon dioxide and water. [p. 36] 1. f 2. a 3. b 4. d 5. e 6. c 7. Photosynthesis and respiration are two processes that keep happening. 8. Angiosperms (flowering plants) and gymnosperms (non-flowering plants) are two kinds of seed plants. Page 3 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 2 (continued) [p. 37] 1. spore [3rd row from the top, starting in the 4th column from the left] 2. seed [2nd row from the right, starting at the top] 3. phloem [diagonal and reversed, starting in the 2nd column from the left, 3rd row from the bottom, going to the 5th column from the right, 4th row from the top] 4. cambium [reversed, 3rd column from the right, starting in the 5th row from the bottom] 5. pollination [diagonal and reversed, starting at the lower right corner, going to the upper left corner] 6. xylem [diagonal, starting in the 1st column at the left, 5th row from the bottom, going to the bottom row, 5th column from the left] Page 4 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 3 [p. 41] 1. They are needed to carry out all the life activities of the body. [p. 42] 2. /3. Possible answers may include any two of the following: skeletal system supports the body, muscular system works with the skeletal system to move the body, respiratory system brings oxygen to the lungs, circulatory system carries oxygen from the lungs to the cells, excretory system removes wastes and keeps the body from overheating, nervous system controls the other systems, endocrine system also controls body activities [p. 43] 4. They all keep materials in motion. A highway keeps traffic and transported goods in motion; a transport systems keep body materials in motion 5. It removes wastes from the body and keeps the body from overheating. [p. 44] 6. Digestion breaks down food into simpler substances so that your body can use them to live and grow. [p. 45] 7. Each organ carries out its own steps in the process of breaking down foods. [p. 47] 8. c 9. d 10. b 11. a [p. 48] 12. Food is crushed and broken into some nutrients in the mouth. 13. The stomach breaks down food further into nutrients 14. In the small intestine, food is further broken down and nutrients enter the blood. [p. 49] 15. The small intestine digests food; the large intestine moves undigested food from the body. [p. 50] 16. The diaphragm pulls down. 17. The diaphragm moves back up. [p. 51] 18. mouth, trachea, bronchi, alveoli Page 5 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 3 (continued) [p. 53] 19. oxygen 20. sugar 21. water [p. 54] 22. Arteries carry blood from the heart. 23. Veins bring blood back to the heart. [p. 55] 24. heart 25. oxygen [p. 57] Reading Diagrams: Blood flows from the right atrium through an artery to the lungs. At the lungs, the blood releases carbon dioxide and picks up oxygen. The blood returns through a vein to the left ventricle of the heart. 26. At the lungs, the blood releases carbon dioxide and picks up oxygen. [p. 58] 27. b 28. a 29. a 30. A large amount of plasma is needed to carry all the nutrients and blood cells. [p. 59] 31. They keep blood from flowing backward. 32. The three kinds are needed to keep blood flowing from the heart to the body and back to the heart. [p. 60] 33./34. respiratory, urinary [p. 61] 35. ureters, bladder, urethra [p. 63] 36. Wastes move out from capillaries into nephrons, then through collecting ducts into the ureter. 37. Cleaned blood moves from nephrons through capillaries and back to veins. Page 6 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 3 (continued) [p. 65] 38. c 39. a 40. b 41. b [p. 66] 1. c 2. a 3. d 4. d 5. c 6. b 7. a 8. c [p. 67] 1. vein 2. saliva 3. nephron 4. artery 5. lungs 6. stomach 7. heart 8. bladder Riddle answer: organ systems Page 7 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 4 [p. 71] 1. fresh water 2. ocean water 3. fresh water 4. ocean water [p. 73] Reading Diagrams: Rain in the mountains (and along the rest of the way) collects in streams that join into tributaries. The tributaries collect into rivers. Rivers flow to the ocean. 5. Sunlight heats the water. 6. Water evaporates. 7. Salt is left behind and collects. [p. 75] 8. melting 9. evaporation [p. 77] 10. warm air 11. warm air 12. warm air 13. cool air [p. 78] 14. As particles of water vapor rise, they slowly lose heat energy, become colder, and get closer together (condense). [p. 79] 15. cirrus, stratus, fog [p. 81] 16. d 17. c 18. a 19. b [p. 83] Students may start the cycle with any step. However, steps must be in the order listed on p. 83 20. evaporation 21. condensation 22. precipitation 23. runoff Page 8 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 4 (continued) Students might match the graphic to the diagram on p. 82. If so, correct answers would be: 20. condensation 21. runoff 22. evaporation 23. precipitation [p. 85] 24. These are structures built by people to store/reach water. 25. These are natural features. The aquifer is a layer that holds water, whereas the water table is the upper level of groundwater. [p. 87] 26. The watershed provides water for people. 27. Water can flow faster through the watershed and carry away soil. Flooding may occur. [p. 88] 28. Possible answers may include that any of the following may be added to the water supply: chemicals used for growing crops, chemicals used to kill harmful insects, waste products from farms and factories, spilled motor oils, trash. 29. Polluting water makes the water unsafe and unusable. [p. 89] 30. Many kinds of materials need to be removed from the water. [p. 91] 31. San Diego, Fresno 32. groundwater [p. 92] 33./34 dams (reservoirs), aqueducts [p. 93] 35. Cities; cities have the same water needs in any kind of year, whether wet or dry. 36. Possible answers may include: take shorter showers, use toilets that flush less water, run dishwashers and washing machines only when full, fix leaks. Page 9 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 4 (continued) [p. 94] 1. watershed 2. fresh water 3. precipitation 4. aqueduct 5. water cycle 6. groundwater 7. reclamation 8. evaporation 9. water vapor 10. fresh water 11. The water cycle includes evaporation and condensation (and/or precipitation). [p. 95] Across 3. flood 5. reservoir 6. drought 8. ocean Down 1. aquifer 2. conserve 4. dam 7. pollute Page 10 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 5 [p. 99] 1. Possible answers may include: You can feel gases in air when you wave your hand. 2. It is caused by the weight of air pressing down on Earth’s surface. [p. 100] 3. decreases 4. increases 5. decreases [p. 101] 6. rises 7. increases [p. 103] 8. b 9. c 10. a [p. 105] 11. land 12. low pressure 13. sea [p. 107] 14. high, low 15. equator [p. 109] 16. a. above 52˚F (above 11˚C) 16. b. below 68˚F (below 20˚C) 16. c. 48˚F-51˚F (9˚C-10˚C) 16. d. 68˚F-75˚F (20˚C-23˚C) [p. 110] 17. cold 18. warm [p. 111] 19. There is a cold current along the Pacific Coast. 20. North and South America (west coasts) [p. 113] 21. stratus clouds and light, steady rain or snow 22. towering clouds and storms Page 11 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 5 (continued) [p. 114] Reading Diagrams: Warm, humid air rises and cools and forms a cloud. Heat is released to the surrounding air. Air in the cloud rises even higher, forming a thundercloud. [p. 115] 23. A cloud front moves in 24. Water is pushed up and down inside a cloud. 25. Lightning jumps from a cloud [p. 117] 26. tornado 27. cyclone 28. funnel cloud 29. thunderhead [p. 118] 30. They are both spinning storms with high winds. 31. A hurricane is a much larger storm with heavy rains as well as winds. It travels over a long period of time and can be tracked over time. A tornado is a smaller storm with much faster wind. It travels so quickly and lasts for such a short time that it is difficult to track. [p. 119] 32. It can cause flooding, which, in turn, can cause landslides and mudslides. 33. It can limit vision. [p. 121] 34. Possible answers may include: They need to plan ahead to leave extra time so that that can travel slowly. 35. 79˚F, with scattered clouds, winds from the west at 21-25 mph [p. 123] 36. rain with temperatures in the 50’s 37. The approaching cold front will drop temperatures into the 40’s, with an end of the rain. [p. 124] 38. Possible answers may include: winds blow out from the center; cool and dry; dry, clear, fair weather 39. Possible answers may include: winds blow in toward the center; warm and humid; warm, stormy weather [p. 125] 40. They are sent into space 41. They are in Earth’s atmosphere. Page 12 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 5 (continued) [p. 126] 1. f 2. c 3. d 4. a 5. h 6. b 7. e 8. i 9. g 10. Global winds move weather conditions from west to east across the United States. [p. 127] Across 1. humidity 2. current 6. barometer 7. climate Down 1. hurricane 3. forecast 4. front 5. tornado 7. cyclone Page 13 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 6 [p. 131] 1. c 2. d 3. a 4. b [p. 133] 5. radiation layer 6. convection layer 7. photosphere 8. the atmosphere (chromosphere and corona) [p. 134] 9. The planets move around the Sun. Moons, in turn, move around their planets, but are still in motion around the Sun. [p. 135] 10. Jupiter 11. Venus 12. Venus [p. 137] 13. The solar system is made up of planets and their moons, and other objects, such as asteroids and comets. [p. 139] 14. Gravity increases. 15. Gravity decreases. [p. 141] 16. c 17. a 18. d 19. b [p. 143] 20. full moon 21. first quarter moon 22. spring tides Page 14 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 6 (continued) [p. 144] 1. astronomical unit 2. solar system 3. telescope 4. satellite 5. asteroid 6. inertia 7. gravity 8. Inertia and gravity keep planets in their orbits around the Sun. [p. 145] 1. star [diagonal, starting in top row, 4th column from the left, going to 4th row from top, 3rd column from the right] 2. moon [2nd row from the bottom, starting in the 3rd column from the left] 3. comet [2nd row from the top, starting in the 1st column at the left] 4. meteor [2nd row from the right, starting in the 2nd row from the top] 5. orbit [2nd column from the left, starting in the 2nd row from the top] 6. tide [4th row from the bottom, starting in the 2nd column from the left] 7. ellipse [3rd row from the bottom, stating in the 1st column at the left] Page 15 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 7 [p. 148] 1. b 2. c 3. a [p. 149] 4. goes up 5. goes down 6. goes down [p. 150] 7. b 8. c 9. a [p. 151] 10. greater 11. lesser [p. 153] 12. /13. Possible answers may include: a solid melts, a liquid freezes or evaporates, a gas condenses. [p. 155] 14. b 15. c 16. a [p. 156] 17. oxygen [p. 157] 18. oxygen, carbon, hydrogen [p. 159] 19. molecule (The other three words are pieces an atom is made of, while a molecule is a particle made up of more than one atom.) 20. electrons (Atomic weight is made up of the weight of protons and neutrons, not electrons, because electrons have so little mass.) [p. 160] 21. nonmetal 22. nonmetal 23. metal Page 16 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 7 (continued) [p. 161] 24. scanning tunneling 25. We can use them to see atoms. [p. 163] 26. 11; they are coded with red letters. 27. 7; they are coded with yellow boxes. [p. 165] 28. Wait to see if they stay mixed or separate. 29. mixture [p. 167] 30. solution 31. Heating allows for additional solute to be dissolved in a solution. [p. 169] Reading Diagrams: Use a filter to separate the sand; allow the mixture to stand for sawdust to float; evaporate the mixture after using a filter so that sugar is left behind; use a magnet to separate the iron filings. 32. c 33. d 34. a 35. b [p. 171] 36. true 37. false (A mixture keeps the properties of the substances that make it up, whereas the substances that are used to make a compound lose their properties.) [p. 173] 38. 6 39. 12 40. 6 [p. 174] 41. Water is a clear liquid at room temperature, whereas carbon dioxide is a colorless gas at room temperature. 42. … the flame may have a special color. [p. 175] 43. They have properties that make them very useful. Page 17 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 7 (continued) [p. 176] 1. volume 2. mass 3. matter 4. density 5. element 6. molecule 7. metal 8. mixture 9. nonmetal 10. metalloid 11. solution [p. 177] 1. atom 2. suspension 3. solvent 4. solute 5. filtering 6. chemical 7. compound 8. hydrocarbon Answer to Riddle: periodic table Page 18 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 8 [p. 180] The two atoms of the oxygen molecule separate and join with the carbon atom, forming a molecule of carbon dioxide. [p. 181] 1. Same: They use the same substances. Different: they are opposites of each other. [p. 183] 2. more 3. more 4. less 5. more [p. 185] 6./7./8. Possible answers may include: forms a solid, forms a gas, releases energy, color changes, forms tarnish. [p. 187] 9. c 10. a 11. b 12. They are good conductors of heat and electricity; they often have a shine when polished. [p. 189] 13. used as conductors, drawn into wires, pounded flat [p. 190] 14. iron oxide, a compound made of iron and oxygen 15. Rust and tarnish eat away a metal, causing it to crumble. [p. 191] 16. Bronze, because it is an alloy, whereas all the others are pure elements. 17. Brass, because it is an alloy, whereas all the others are pure elements. 18. Steel, because it is an alloy, whereas all the others are pure elements. [p. 193] 19. Cl; it is a nonmetal, whereas all the others are metals. 20. Na; it is a metal, whereas all the others are nonmetals. 21. … dissolve in water. Page 19 of 20 California Science ©2008 Grade 5 Interactive Text Answer Key Chapter 8 (continued) [p. 195] 22. Possible answers may include: turn litmus red, taste sour, form charged hydrogen particles in water. 23. litmus paper. 24. Possible answers may include: turn litmus blue, taste bitter, feel slippery, form charged OH particles in water. [p. 197] 25. acid 26. acid 27. base [p. 199] 28. false (Salt remains behind when ocean water evaporates.) 29. false (Salt lowers the freezing point of water.) 30. true [p. 200] 1. d 2. c 3. d 4. b 5. a 6. a 7. d [p. 201] Across 2. salt 3. alloy 5. indicator Down 1. conductor 3. acid 4. base 6. reactive Page 20 of 20